May 2014 Moms

UO Thursday!

245

Re: UO Thursday!

  • I have a friend named Richard. He always went by Ricky, and then when he went to college he decided to go by Rick. Graduated, came back to town and everyone still calls him Ricky. He tried so hard for the first year or so to get us to call him Rick, but it's just so hard to do. He eventually gave up. So now when I see him in a large group it's very clear who are his "work friends" and who are his friends he's known forever, based on what they call him. I feel bad, and I want to respect his wishes on what to be called, but it's a tough habit to break especially when 99% of the time when we see him there is alcohol being consumed.
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  • Kaylee524 said:
    I think all the introvert stuff (articles everywhere online like "Are you an introvert? Read our list to find out!" and "How to care for your introvert" and on and on) is a weird fad and wish it would go away. 

    (Possibly I'm just spoiled because we took the Myers Briggs test in elementary school and again in high school and I've known I'm an introvert for as long as I can remember.)
    Meh. I've known I'm an introvert for pretty much my whole life, but I remember most of the time growing up being told that there was something wrong with me because of that. My teachers said I didn't participate enough, my parents told me I wasn't socializing enough, etc. Maybe it was just my hometown that treated it as some kind of disorder, but I'm just glad that it seems like now people are actually acting like being an introvert is just a different (and completely normal) way of finding energy and fulfillment, and not a handicap.
    Yes, all of this! I love the attention introversion has been getting in the last few years because I finally feel like people have a better grasp of what it actually means, or at least are trying to understand. I think it's in the book The Introvert Advantage that the author discusses how introverts have to use energy in social interactions and it can be draining, whereas extroverted people tend to get energy from social interactions. That was something I could never articulate before, just something that's always frustrated me.
    It is nice that it is getting some attention, but I do think that if you are posting stuff on FB along the lines of "Look! I'm an introvert!" then you are obviously NOT that introverted.

    My DH, a total extrovert, still struggles with the introvert thing. He THRIVES on big groups whereas I find them utterly exhausting. 
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  • MrsKTen said:
    I think it's weird when adults still call or refer to their parents as Mommy and Daddy.  I have a coworker that does this ALL THE TIME.  It makes me cringe.
    When I lived in the south, it seemed common. One of my almost-senior-aged co-workers used Mama and Daddy. I now live back home in northeast and adults don't tend to use Mamma/Mommy and Daddy. I use Ma and Mum, and Dad for my parents.




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  • hhegyesi said:
    i have a hard time taking seriously any grown man who continues to use the juvenile diminutive of his name (i.e., Timmy, Billy, Bobby, etc.). 

    sorrynotsorry

    edit 'cause spellcheck has ruined me.
    Me too.  If I have a son, he will not have a name that has a common diminutive... no Dicky around these parts, TYVM.  And no, I'm not just going to call him Dick either.

    In fact I don't like any boy names that have a common nickname at all, ending in "y" or just shortened.  I want my son to have a name that he can use as it is without having people changing it all the time.
    This exactly.  I'm a big fan of short and concise names for boys.  (i.e. Cole and Ryan)  No real abbreviation, shortening, or adding to them.
  • Miles2Go said:
    Jennyinheaven said:
    I don't care for the super exercise posters, Im almost 8 months pregnant I am happy with a walk or a prenatal yoga video, I don't need to hear about how you just can't keep up in spinning, kickboxing etc, like you used to.
    I don't care for the people who seem to have a problem with the fact that some people have different pregnancy experiences than others. I'm totally about to be that person, but... it's pretty obvious which posts are which, so don't read the exercise posts? I'm sorry if it bugs you that I still work out almost every day and am just now, at this point in my pregnancy, starting to get uncomfortable. I wouldn't start a conversation just to establish those facts, but I'll remember moving forward that I'm not allowed to comment on anything having to do with pains or questions about exercise or anything else having to do with bothers of pregnancy, since I didn't start experiencing them soon enough.
    My first pregnancy I was able to exercise consistently. This time, I had to stop back in November for medical reasons. I've noted an enormous difference in my comfort level. I remarked just yesterday that last time around, I didn't feel this much pain and discomfort until 40ish weeks. Now, that could just be because every pregnancy is different, but I do attribute some of it to my comparative lack of activity, and I lament that loss. Thinking if hitting up a crossfit gym tomorrow....
    I think you might be right about general comfort level relating to *some* general activity @Miles2Go

    I've been trying to keep up with my regular yoga schedule as best I can, but sometimes getting into yoga gear and going to the studio is awful when it's -15 outside. On weeks where I have skipped both my yoga classes I feel gross and definitely feel more 'uncomfortable pregnant'. But if I force myself to go to classes, I notice by the end of the week I feel overall better than the weeks I skip.
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  • I do think (and admit that I am guilty also) us BTDT moms scoff or get bent out of shape too quickly when FTMs post things like "I'm getting uncomfortable...!" I forget that this is their first rodeo and I'm quick to roll my eyes or whatever.

    Me, too. I read it and think, "This is nothing, wait until you hit full term"

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  • JessElam said:
    hhegyesi said:
    i have a hard time taking seriously any grown man who continues to use the juvenile diminutive of his name (i.e., Timmy, Billy, Bobby, etc.). 

    sorrynotsorry

    edit 'cause spellcheck has ruined me.
    Me too.  If I have a son, he will not have a name that has a common diminutive... no Dicky around these parts, TYVM.  And no, I'm not just going to call him Dick either.

    In fact I don't like any boy names that have a common nickname at all, ending in "y" or just shortened.  I want my son to have a name that he can use as it is without having people changing it all the time.
    This exactly.  I'm a big fan of short and concise names for boys.  (i.e. Cole and Ryan)  No real abbreviation, shortening, or adding to them.
    agreed. also - not a huge fan of nicknames in general. DH keeps trying to figure out a nickname for every name we consider, but i'm of the mind that we call Peanut by his/her given name. what's so bad about that?
  • IBackBevo said:
    My UO, skinny jeans on guys are gross, especially when they are worn with the ass and boxers hanging halfway out. Just ewww! chicken legs are not sexy. Blame it on the country girl in me, but a nice fitting pair of Wranglers are 100,000Xs hotter and make a guy's butt look sexy as hell.
    Yes!  Skinny jeans on dudes are GROSS.
    Not gonna lie. I broke up with a guy because we went to J. Crew, and he bought women's skinny jeans AND wore a size that was much smaller than my size. I'm not heavy at all, but that made me feel terrible. I guess he was hipster before that became a thing, so breaking up was inevitable!
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  • Piggy backing off of adding "ness" to words... I also hate that words that aren't real words have been woven into the lexicon. 

    Worst offender: Functionality. Not a word. Adding "ality" to a word does not make you sound smarter. 

    Also, I know a fairly well-educated person who says "conversate" 





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  • IBackBevo said:



    My UO, skinny jeans on guys are gross, especially when they are worn with the ass and boxers hanging halfway out. Just ewww! chicken legs are not sexy.

    Blame it on the country girl in me, but a nice fitting pair of Wranglers are 100,000Xs hotter and make a guy's butt look sexy as hell.

    Yes!  Skinny jeans on dudes are GROSS.


    We currently live in a city with a very large community of hipsters, and the skiny jeans, too tight shirts, and lace up old fashioned boots look is rampant.

    And it never fails, there's always at least one guy walking around with his bulge WAY too defined. I wonder if they realize that all that constriction reduces sperm count? In their case, that might be a good thing...

    All I know, is that until I moved here, I never knew guys could get camel toes haha.

     








  • My son will wear his sister's hand me down skinny jeans at least until he's out of diapers. I hate that all baby boy pants are basically mini adult men pants. Why hide the cute chubby baby legs?
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  • 1) I hate yoga pants. I hate how they feel, I hate how they look, and I hate them.

    2) I also hate skinny jeans. It's like suffocating your privates, male or female.
  • hhegyesi said:
    JessElam said:
    hhegyesi said:
    i have a hard time taking seriously any grown man who continues to use the juvenile diminutive of his name (i.e., Timmy, Billy, Bobby, etc.). 

    sorrynotsorry

    edit 'cause spellcheck has ruined me.
    Me too.  If I have a son, he will not have a name that has a common diminutive... no Dicky around these parts, TYVM.  And no, I'm not just going to call him Dick either.

    In fact I don't like any boy names that have a common nickname at all, ending in "y" or just shortened.  I want my son to have a name that he can use as it is without having people changing it all the time.
    This exactly.  I'm a big fan of short and concise names for boys.  (i.e. Cole and Ryan)  No real abbreviation, shortening, or adding to them.
    agreed. also - not a huge fan of nicknames in general. DH keeps trying to figure out a nickname for every name we consider, but i'm of the mind that we call Peanut by his/her given name. what's so bad about that?
    I've never gotten the whole naming a kid one thing just so you can call him another name. I call DD Kait or Kaitlyn. But I introduce her as Kaitlyn and at school she goes by Kaitlyn. My dad planned on calling her Bug from the beginning (Kaitlyn=Kait=Katie=Katydid=Bug....his logic) and it has stuck. He and I will both call her Bug. I also call her Twitter because, as she put it "I have a lot of thoughts and they just keep coming out of my mouth." She answers to all of them. We have friend who said they named their kid Elijah but they're just going to call him Eli. Then why not just name him Eli? 
    YES! My DS will be Jack. And I get people asking "So his name is John?" No it's Jack. I like Jack, therefore I will name him Jack. I also don't understand how people get Jack out of John, Bill out of William, or Dick out of Richard. The Richard I know goes by Rich, which seems right. Why I get mad at this? I don't know!
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  • hhegyesi said:
    JessElam said:
    hhegyesi said:
    i have a hard time taking seriously any grown man who continues to use the juvenile diminutive of his name (i.e., Timmy, Billy, Bobby, etc.). 

    sorrynotsorry

    edit 'cause spellcheck has ruined me.
    Me too.  If I have a son, he will not have a name that has a common diminutive... no Dicky around these parts, TYVM.  And no, I'm not just going to call him Dick either.

    In fact I don't like any boy names that have a common nickname at all, ending in "y" or just shortened.  I want my son to have a name that he can use as it is without having people changing it all the time.
    This exactly.  I'm a big fan of short and concise names for boys.  (i.e. Cole and Ryan)  No real abbreviation, shortening, or adding to them.
    agreed. also - not a huge fan of nicknames in general. DH keeps trying to figure out a nickname for every name we consider, but i'm of the mind that we call Peanut by his/her given name. what's so bad about that?
    I've never gotten the whole naming a kid one thing just so you can call him another name. I call DD Kait or Kaitlyn. But I introduce her as Kaitlyn and at school she goes by Kaitlyn. My dad planned on calling her Bug from the beginning (Kaitlyn=Kait=Katie=Katydid=Bug....his logic) and it has stuck. He and I will both call her Bug. I also call her Twitter because, as she put it "I have a lot of thoughts and they just keep coming out of my mouth." She answers to all of them. We have friend who said they named their kid Elijah but they're just going to call him Eli. Then why not just name him Eli? 
    I can say what our reasoning is - if LO was going to be a girl, we had the name Virginia picked out because it is DH's grandmother's name. She is an amazing woman and we both really want to name our kid after her. However, the name itself is just so old fashioned ... we would use the nickname Ginny instead. Her legal name would still be DH's grandmother's name, but she wouldn't have to use it.
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  • Re: nicknames,
    This baby will be named James. We will not call him Jim or Jimmy. I hate them both.

    That being said I'm not so against nicknames in general. I Hess around here that seems to be an ou!
  • JennyinheavenJennyinheaven member
    edited March 2014
    Nicknames, I like them my daughter will be named Joshephine, but we well call her Josie, in this way she has a name to be be used in the professional world when she grows up but when she's a little girl she doesn't have to carry a giant mature name. I also go by an abbrevation of my name so...
  • With DD1, I loved the name Amanda and hated the nickname Mandy. I REFUSED to have her nickname Mandy. So I invented Ada. Four years later, she answers to both Ada and Amanda, and does not answer to Mandy.

    Not sure where I was going with this.
  • spacepotatoes said:
    Kaylee524 said:
    I think all the introvert stuff (articles everywhere online like "Are you an introvert? Read our list to find out!" and "How to care for your introvert" and on and on) is a weird fad and wish it would go away. 

    (Possibly I'm just spoiled because we took the Myers Briggs test in elementary school and again in high school and I've known I'm an introvert for as long as I can remember.)
    Meh. I've known I'm an introvert for pretty much my whole life, but I remember most of the time growing up being told that there was something wrong with me because of that. My teachers said I didn't participate enough, my parents told me I wasn't socializing enough, etc. Maybe it was just my hometown that treated it as some kind of disorder, but I'm just glad that it seems like now people are actually acting like being an introvert is just a different (and completely normal) way of finding energy and fulfillment, and not a handicap.
    Yes, all of this! I love the attention introversion has been getting in the last few years because I finally feel like people have a better grasp of what it actually means, or at least are trying to understand. I think it's in the book The Introvert Advantage that the author discusses how introverts have to use energy in social interactions and it can be draining, whereas extroverted people tend to get energy from social interactions. That was something I could never articulate before, just something that's always frustrated me.
    I just feel like "oh I'm such an introvert, I just want to be lazy at home" is going to be the next "man, I'm sooooo OCD, look at me sorting my objects" and it's irritating.  If there really are people benefiting from all the attention introversion is getting that's cool, but it's like the overplayed song on the radio to me.
    Yeah, I actually get that. I sometimes think it is becoming a bit of a "fad" to claim that you're an introvert. Several times recently I've had conversations with people about introversion/extroversion, and someone who is so obviously an extrovert says "well, I think I'm an introvert!" Umm, no. You're not. I do prefer that over people making us introverts feel like there's something wrong with us, though. :)
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  • hfooterhfooter member
    edited March 2014


    hhegyesi said:


    JessElam said:




    hhegyesi said:

    i have a hard time taking seriously any grown man who continues to use the juvenile diminutive of his name (i.e., Timmy, Billy, Bobby, etc.). 

    sorrynotsorry

    edit 'cause spellcheck has ruined me.

    Me too.  If I have a son, he will not have a name that has a common diminutive... no Dicky around these parts, TYVM.  And no, I'm not just going to call him Dick either.

    In fact I don't like any boy names that have a common nickname at all, ending in "y" or just shortened.  I want my son to have a name that he can use as it is without having people changing it all the time.

    This exactly.  I'm a big fan of short and concise names for boys.  (i.e. Cole and Ryan)  No real abbreviation, shortening, or adding to them.

    agreed. also - not a huge fan of nicknames in general. DH keeps trying to figure out a nickname for every name we consider, but i'm of the mind that we call Peanut by his/her given name. what's so bad about that?


    I've never gotten the whole naming a kid one thing just so you can call him another name. I call DD Kait or Kaitlyn. But I introduce her as Kaitlyn and at school she goes by Kaitlyn. My dad planned on calling her Bug from the beginning (Kaitlyn=Kait=Katie=Katydid=Bug....his logic) and it has stuck. He and I will both call her Bug. I also call her Twitter because, as she put it "I have a lot of thoughts and they just keep coming out of my mouth." She answers to all of them. We have friend who said they named their kid Elijah but they're just going to call him Eli. Then why not just name him Eli? 

    -------- Stupid quote broke ---------

    Eh our sons name will be Clayton. I'm not the biggest fan so I will call him Clay. I agreed to the name at one point and by then DH already told his grandma that our kids name is her family name (maiden name). And my mom also told my grandpa Clay's middle name was going to be after him. So I'm kind of stuck with it. And hence why I'll call him Clay because I like it better.

    I did get my husband to agree to do CD out of the whole name situation so that's cool.

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  • As in I hate the word " irregardless".
  • hfooterhfooter member
    edited March 2014

    As in I hate the word " irregardless".

    I am horrible with the English language. Grammar, spelling, you name it.

    But it's not even a real word, right?

    Just makes me think of Johnjay from The Johnjay and Rich show. Johnjay is kind of a douche and always says it.

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  • Irregardless. Hate it.
    ditto. 

    possibly even worse: irregardlessly
  • mz628 said:
    Surprised this hasn't been said, but I hate when adults can't use the proper term for penis or vagina. Ding a ling? Cookie? FFS, use the correct terminology. I also cringe when I hear a woman talk about their "juices." I get your turned on, but I don't like it. Or the word "moist" to describe it... Blech.
    Cookie?  Man, don't tell cookie monster.
  • If we have a boy (team green) he will be Benjamin Theodore and DH is already calling him Benny Ted so you know where we stand. :)
  • RoufiRoufi member
    Tnpeach said:

    With DD1, I loved the name Amanda and hated the nickname Mandy. I REFUSED to have her nickname Mandy. So I invented Ada. Four years later, she answers to both Ada and Amanda, and does not answer to Mandy.

    Not sure where I was going with this.

    I'm Amanda and I DESPISE being called Mandy. I have one friend who calls me that and she's the only person in the world who can get away with it, including my H. Everyone just calls me Manda since it rolls off the tongue better. I was Roufi as a kid thanks to my MN, and my H calls me generic or ridiculous NNs.

    Also 100% in agreement w PPs about "irregardless" and "conversate". Picture steam coming out my ears.

    Finally, I judge the heck out of ppl who spend on luxuries rather than seeing to basic necessities. My SIL got her power turned off at one point, FIl is now paying for it, yet she drives a new car, and her fiance quit his job because it was beneath him, only to have his amazing job op fall through after. Totally judging.

  • mz628 said:



    I also cringe when I hear a woman talk about their "juices." I get your turned on, but I don't like it. Or the word "moist" to describe it... Blech.

    I hate the word moist in general! Sounds nasty.
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